Assessing treatment effect heterogeneity in the presence of missing effect modifier data in cluster-randomized trials

被引:0
作者
Blette, Bryan S. [1 ]
Halpern, Scott D. [2 ,3 ]
Li, Fan [4 ,5 ]
Harhay, Michael O. [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Vanderbilt Univ, Med Ctr, Dept Biostat, 2525 West End Ave, 11118A, Nashville, TN 37203 USA
[2] Univ Penn, Perelman Sch Med, Dept Biostat Epidemiol & Informat, Philadelphia, PA USA
[3] Univ Penn, PAIR Palliat & Adv Illness Res Ctr, Perelman Sch Med, Clin Trials Methods & Outcomes Lab, Philadelphia, PA USA
[4] Yale Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Biostat, New Haven, CT USA
[5] Yale Univ, Ctr Methods Implementat & Prevent Sci, New Haven, CT USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
Bayesian inference; cluster randomized trials; heterogeneous treatment effects; missing data; multilevel multiple imputation; SALVAGE THERAPY; PROSTATE-CANCER; SURVIVAL;
D O I
10.1177/09622802241242323
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Understanding whether and how treatment effects vary across subgroups is crucial to inform clinical practice and recommendations. Accordingly, the assessment of heterogeneous treatment effects based on pre-specified potential effect modifiers has become a common goal in modern randomized trials. However, when one or more potential effect modifiers are missing, complete-case analysis may lead to bias and under-coverage. While statistical methods for handling missing data have been proposed and compared for individually randomized trials with missing effect modifier data, few guidelines exist for the cluster-randomized setting, where intracluster correlations in the effect modifiers, outcomes, or even missingness mechanisms may introduce further threats to accurate assessment of heterogeneous treatment effect. In this article, the performance of several missing data methods are compared through a simulation study of cluster-randomized trials with continuous outcome and missing binary effect modifier data, and further illustrated using real data from the Work, Family, and Health Study. Our results suggest that multilevel multiple imputation and Bayesian multilevel multiple imputation have better performance than other available methods, and that Bayesian multilevel multiple imputation has lower bias and closer to nominal coverage than standard multilevel multiple imputation when there are model specification or compatibility issues.
引用
收藏
页码:909 / 927
页数:19
相关论文
共 68 条
[1]   Estimating Conditional Average Treatment Effects [J].
Abrevaya, Jason ;
Hsu, Yu-Chin ;
Lieli, Robert P. .
JOURNAL OF BUSINESS & ECONOMIC STATISTICS, 2015, 33 (04) :485-505
[2]   Quantifying the impact of fixed effects modeling of clusters in multiple imputation for cluster randomized trials [J].
Andridge, Rebecca R. .
BIOMETRICAL JOURNAL, 2011, 53 (01) :57-74
[3]   Multiple Imputation for Multilevel Data with Continuous and Binary Variables [J].
Audigier, Vincent ;
White, Ian R. ;
Jolani, Shahab ;
Debray, Thomas P. A. ;
Quartagno, Matteo ;
Carpenter, James ;
van Buuren, Stef ;
Resche-Rigon, Matthieu .
STATISTICAL SCIENCE, 2018, 33 (02) :160-183
[4]   Small-sample degrees of freedom with multiple imputation [J].
Barnard, J ;
Rubin, DB .
BIOMETRIKA, 1999, 86 (04) :948-955
[5]   Multiple imputation of covariates by substantive-model compatible fully conditional specification [J].
Bartlett, Jonathan W. ;
Morris, Tim P. .
STATA JOURNAL, 2015, 15 (02) :437-456
[6]   A comparison of imputation strategies in cluster randomized trials with missing binary outcomes [J].
Caille, Agnes ;
Leyrat, Clemence ;
Giraudeau, Bruno .
STATISTICAL METHODS IN MEDICAL RESEARCH, 2016, 25 (06) :2650-2669
[7]   EXPLAINING THE GIBBS SAMPLER [J].
CASELLA, G ;
GEORGE, EI .
AMERICAN STATISTICIAN, 1992, 46 (03) :167-174
[8]  
Chen XY, 2024, ANN APPL STAT, V18, P350, DOI [10.1214/23-AOAS1792, 10.1214/23-aoas1792]
[9]   BART: BAYESIAN ADDITIVE REGRESSION TREES [J].
Chipman, Hugh A. ;
George, Edward I. ;
McCulloch, Robert E. .
ANNALS OF APPLIED STATISTICS, 2010, 4 (01) :266-298
[10]   Handling missing values in cost effectiveness analyses that use data from cluster randomized trials [J].
Diaz-Ordaz, K. ;
Kenward, Michael G. ;
Grieve, Richard .
JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL STATISTICAL SOCIETY SERIES A-STATISTICS IN SOCIETY, 2014, 177 (02) :457-474